Active plasmon interference control on ultrafast time scales by free electrons
Rong Huang, Weiwei Luo, Wei Wu, Mengxin Ren, Xinzheng Zhang, Wei Cai,, and Jingjun Xu

TL;DR
This paper demonstrates ultrafast control of surface plasmon polariton interference using free electron beams, enabling manipulation on attosecond time scales for advanced optical applications.
Contribution
It introduces a novel method to actively control SPP interference within subcycle times using free electron beams and phase manipulation techniques.
Findings
Higher-order interference observed via propagation phase control.
Ultrafast phase control achieved in the attosecond regime.
Potential for ultrafast optical processing and sensing.
Abstract
Interference between light waves is one of the widely known phenomena in physics, which is widely used in modern optics, ranging from precise detection at the nanoscale to gravitational-wave observation. Akin to light, both classical and quantum interferences between surface plasmon polaritons (SPPs) have been demonstrated. However, to actively control the SPP interference within subcycle in time (usually less than several femtoseconds in the visible range) is still missing, which hinders the ultimate manipulation of SPP interference on ultrafast time scale. In this paper, the interference between SPPs launched by a hole dimer, which was excited by a grazing incident free electron beam without direct contact, was manipulated through both propagation and initial phase difference control. Particularly, using cathodoluminescence spectroscopy, the appearance of higher-order interference…
Peer Reviews
No public reviews on file for this paper yet. If you reviewed it on a platform where reviews are public (OpenReview, ICLR, NeurIPS, ICML), you can paste yours below so the community can read it here.
Videos
No videos yet. Explain this paper in a talk, walkthrough, or lecture? Add one.
Taxonomy
TopicsLaser-Matter Interactions and Applications · Plasmonic and Surface Plasmon Research · Photonic and Optical Devices
